I grew up around gas engines and know how to do anything required there. I did not grow up around tractors, except for very occasionally using a Kubota in my construction jobs. I was in my late 30s by the time I moved out of town and got a tractor, but up until now I've had gas tractors (figuring I would know how to fix them and thinking they'd be a better choice for 1 hour at a time use in the winter, start better in the winter, etc).
Now I have a diesel Kubota and am in need of a "Diesel for Dummies" type tutorial.
Questions so far:
Glow plugs: I was told to turn the key until the glow plug light goes out, then fire it up. I was also told to not use the glowplugs in the summer or for too long at a time. Which is is?
Warm ups: If I start the gas tractor in cold weather I wait until it stops sounding like a diesel before I move it and then wait until the temp gauge at least moves off the peg to do any work. I also had analog temp gauges till now, so I could see smaller changes. My (L5740) has 8 bars on the temp guage, and so far rides with 4 illuminated most of the time. Do I need to wait for 2 bars? All 4? When can I start working it? When is it safe to move to hook up an implement or back out of the shed. Keep in mind I may be talking 15 or 20 F below 0. (I do have a block heater). Even at 70 yesterday morning is didn't sound as clean when expermented and didn't wait for the glow plug.
Cool downs: I was taught to idle the tractor for awhile before shutting down. If I am working my small Ford I can see the temp gauge fall after awhile, and shut it off then. The Kubota is going to stay at 4 bars, so how long should I idle it for? If I shut it off right away and turn in on 5 minutes later it will leap to 5 bars, if I idle it for longer I don't think it will jump over 4.
Fuel Gelling: I vaguely get the concept of winter fuel and gelling. I assume there's something I can add to the summer fuel to prevent this (say I have half a tank and get caught by surprise--this tractor won't get a lot of hours and I"m OCD about not having too much air in the tank). The old guys use kerosine, but I'm guessing there's a more sophisticated option? [I haven't even looked into this yet, so it's probably obvious]
That's what I know I don't know. I'm sure there's much more. What am I missing?
Thanks,
Now I have a diesel Kubota and am in need of a "Diesel for Dummies" type tutorial.
Questions so far:
Glow plugs: I was told to turn the key until the glow plug light goes out, then fire it up. I was also told to not use the glowplugs in the summer or for too long at a time. Which is is?
Warm ups: If I start the gas tractor in cold weather I wait until it stops sounding like a diesel before I move it and then wait until the temp gauge at least moves off the peg to do any work. I also had analog temp gauges till now, so I could see smaller changes. My (L5740) has 8 bars on the temp guage, and so far rides with 4 illuminated most of the time. Do I need to wait for 2 bars? All 4? When can I start working it? When is it safe to move to hook up an implement or back out of the shed. Keep in mind I may be talking 15 or 20 F below 0. (I do have a block heater). Even at 70 yesterday morning is didn't sound as clean when expermented and didn't wait for the glow plug.
Cool downs: I was taught to idle the tractor for awhile before shutting down. If I am working my small Ford I can see the temp gauge fall after awhile, and shut it off then. The Kubota is going to stay at 4 bars, so how long should I idle it for? If I shut it off right away and turn in on 5 minutes later it will leap to 5 bars, if I idle it for longer I don't think it will jump over 4.
Fuel Gelling: I vaguely get the concept of winter fuel and gelling. I assume there's something I can add to the summer fuel to prevent this (say I have half a tank and get caught by surprise--this tractor won't get a lot of hours and I"m OCD about not having too much air in the tank). The old guys use kerosine, but I'm guessing there's a more sophisticated option? [I haven't even looked into this yet, so it's probably obvious]
That's what I know I don't know. I'm sure there's much more. What am I missing?
Thanks,
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